Saturday, February 24, 2018

The “lady” has new shoes …

Margo and her shoes – no question about it, Margo
really does like her shoes and with her handbags to match she has put together
quite the collection of fashion accessories. Now fully ensconced in our new
Windsor home, we are still working on just how best to store them both as our
walk-in wardrobe lacks adequate display space for her growing collection. On
our recent “bizcation” aboard Star Princess, Margo had plenty of opportunity to
wander the decks, all decked-out herself!
On a more somber occasion, a few years back, when we both attended a
memorial service for my father down in Sydney, it was only “the nieces” that
picked up on the shoes Margo wore for the occasion and all I can recall is them
forming an entirely new opinion about their auntie!

But in our family, it is shoes of a different type that frequently generate the
same level of excitement and enthusiasm. And 2017 proved to be a year when we
spent more on these different types of shoes than Margo budgets for in any
given decade. Ouch! We are talking about tires for our cars and for as long as
I can recall, we have called them shoes. Perhaps it is the reference to wheels
being shod with new rubber that creates the association with real shoes or
perhaps it is simply a matter of not being able to take a car out on the road
because it isn’t adequately shod, but all the same, in our family buying new
shoes for the car, as much-anticipated as they often are, just doesn’t generate
the same degree of enthusiasm from all of us.

Just this week, it was another lady, our pretty red
with black trim track-oriented Corvette Z06 received its latest pairs of shoes
and they certainly brought a smile to my face at least. What is it with red and
black? Last time on track it was almost impossible to “romp on the gas” as the
rear end would simply break away from lack of grip. Many of our friends who
track Corvettes are puzzled by our ongoing preference for these Bridgestone
Potenza RE760 Sport as the Treadware number stamped on the tires is pretty high
(i.e. at 300 you would expect these tires to be hard) and yet, after a lap or
two, they get really sticky and do the trick. I often come off track and return
to the pits and scratch my head and yet, the confidence I have with these tires
remains very high!

We are looking forward to spring this year and while we will not be pursuing an
ambitious program we are still planning on doing three or four outings, mostly
at our local track here in Colorado that is just beyond Byers – the High Plains
Raceway (HPR). We have lost count how many laps Margo and I have done on this
track but we have to be close to 1,000 by now and it takes little time for us
to sort out the flow of the track and begin to exploit the many turns included
in the circuit. And of course, we are always circulating on the full course,
which is 2.55 miles start to finish. Recording times below two minutes is the
goal for most of us, weekend track enthusiasts, and for both of us this remains
a goal that is out there that hopefully, we will be able to get close to
recording.

As an introduction of what a day at the track looks
like, the last time we were camped at the track with our good friends from
Southern California, Brian and Jan Kenny, we were able to take a few photos –
all of them when it was Margo’s turn to get behind the wheel and as we now are
about to put the new shoes on the Corvette, it seemed only appropriate to look
back at how the Corvette looked with new shoes.

Safety has always been a
priority for us so we added the harness bar and the six point harness only a
short time before this outing and to make it conform to the standards our good
friends at our club, the National Auto Sports Association (NASA) – and no, not
THAT NASA – we had the Corvette seats modified so the anti-submarining straps
came up through the seatand not over
the front lip of the seat as this allows the harness to work properly should it
ever be called upon to restrain you in any shunt you may be involved in.

Once strapped in the car, on this occasion Margo had
agreed for me to come along for the ride. I really like to do this as I get a
real kick from the way Margo approaches this track. It always takes Margo two
or three laps to line the car up close to perfectly and thereafter she is quite
capable of holding her own with the other drivers on track in her category.

Margo is now in NASA’s HPDE 2 group which means she runs with Group 1 and 2
drivers, the difference being Group 1 must have instructors whereas Group 2 you
are on your own. And while both groups don’t allow passengers when on track
with NASA, weekends often start with Friday open-track days where the
opportunity to take a passenger is something track management monitors and with
all the laps we have both done, there is never any issue with Margo taking me
along for the ride as she has done with business clients on occasion.

We have tow hooks permanently affixed to the chassis so
that should the worse happen, we wont add any further damage to the bodywork
and since we have had them installed, we haven’t had “an off” that required
attendance by the tow trucks. What we have done to turn our lovely Corvette
into a track car is pretty basic. The fluids are all changed at the start of
each year and we monitor them as the year progresses but typically, they stay
true all year. The specs of a number of the fluids – brake fluids in particular
– are upgraded in order to tolerate higher temperatures and we have upgraded
the brakes, both rotors and pads, with a more track-oriented focus that in our
case includes drilled StopTech rotors and Hawk High Performance Plus. And then
we have had a more aggressive alignment performed resulting in a little more
toe-in, more aggressive negative camber and a pretty well maxed-out castor. All
to help us be able to turn-in a little more aggressively!

But having the right shoes definitely helps as well and
this is where we inspect the Bridgestones before and after each outing. The
primary goal is to return to the pit with all four tires having the same
pressure, which in our case is about 36psi coming off track. Which means going
out with slightly different pressures left to right and I remember that “left
is light” and when you look back at the track map, you will see why – so going
out, it’s 32psi right and 30psi left! And of course, there are very few
occasions where you don’t find Margo also inspecting her shoes which on this
occasion meant a trip to Jimmy Choo on our last trip to Las Vegas. “No, I don’t
have any good sandals but these will do the trick,” I seem to recall …

One aspect of HPR that we really like is that there is
almost nothing to hit should you ever get to experience an “agricultural
excursion.” At the very bottom of the track, depicted on the track map at turns
6 (Danny’s Lesson) and then the complex of turns 9(a), 9(b) and 10 (To Hell on
a Bobsled) – all the turns have great names, by the way –there is nothing but
deep, oozing mud and encountering any of that stuff can put an end to your day
pretty quickly.

For us, most of the fun takes place on the tight hairpin at
turn 8 which requires some serious braking and a really good look over your
left shoulder and on more than one occasion, I have dropped a tire or two –
once spinning out completely! But no harm was done other than having to pull a
whole lot of muck and grass from the radiator opening. For Margo, it continues
to be very much a rhythm track and sitting alongside her this outing, she
quickly became one with the track and the amount of energy she exerted was
minimal even as her speed continued to climb with each lap!

Depending on the club we happen to be spending the
weekend with, our time on the track is usually limited to either twenty or
thirty minutes and if you think for one moment that isn’t all that long, just
try staying completely focused on your car for that long. There are two really
good reasons why you take a performance car to the track and that is that
everyone is going the same way (hopefully) and yes, you can go as fast as you
like! We often talk to drivers who are new to the track and they talk about how
quickly they can drive the front range “Peak to Peak” highway but in all
reality, they have no idea what it really is like on track.

Oftentimes joining
more experienced drivers on track, in no time at all a train of cars forms
behind these first-timers and it takes a couple of outings if not weekends
before you come to understand your car and then the track. Margo and I vividly
recall our first weekend on track at California’s Big Willow – the infamous
fastest track in the west at Willow Springs – and as we departed for home we
both were visibly shaken by how much we had to learn. But time and laps are
good teachers and now Big Willow is one of our favorite tracks.

There is always one more lap to go once you pass the
final start / finish line and it’s the cool down lap that at HPR takes us all
the way around the track before we find the exit to the pits. It never ceases
to amaze us just how competitive some drivers on track can be as it has been on
our cool down lap that some of them elect to pass us – as they all have on-board
video recorders I guess it is that one opportunity to pass Margo. As you may
also recall, the license plate surround on our Corvette points out in jest,
“You have just been passed by a Grandparent!”

But the cool down lap is when you
take a good look at all your instruments – the Corvette has a heads-up display
that shows revs, speed and transmission temp which we watch like hawks. Before
we upgraded to the Tick Performance Adjustable Clutch Master Cylinder Kit on
hot days we would find the clutch pedal going all the way to the floor leaving
us with no options to change gear but with that simple upgrade, we haven’t
experienced any further trouble no matter how hot HPR temperatures climb to.

Climbing out of the car and coming back down to earth
all the while chatting away with those who have come to check you out and to
make sure you stay hydrated, is always a time to reflect. Margo and I talk over
every session on track and when we go out together, whether it is Margo behind
the wheel or me, we always see adjustments we can make to either our lines or
our speed. We are always asked “how fast did you go” and we have to admit, we
are never sure but that really isn’t the point.

All through the times we have
spent on tracks around the country, what the real point has become is that we
get to relax. Surprised? Well, what we mean as time on track requires our
complete attention, so much so that what may have been worrying us all week is no
longer a concern. Work-related issues simply fall by the wayside and for Margo
and me it’s a real treat to be able to put that all behind us. And of course,
when it comes to putting things behind us, then there is one thing Margo likes
doing more than being on track - sling over her shoulder one of her favorite
bags and her most recent purchase is one that she cares a lot about. Yet one
more impulse-buy on our last trip to Vegas; I guess what you buy in Vegas ends
up never staying in Vegas!

And now, its back to thoughts of accessories and
those all-important shoes for the Corvette – watch for posts later this year as
once again, we relax behind the wheel, keep an eye on our lap times, enjoy the
company of friend and oh yes, continue to end each day with our traditional
martinis, no matter how hot it might be on track.